In 1972 I was nine years old and my Mum bought me a copy of "Trillions" by Nicholas Fisk. We lived on a farm six kilometres from the town of Canowindra in NSW, Australia. I had enjoyed picture books and Australian classics like "Snugglepot and Cuddlepie", "Blinky Bill" and "The Magic Pudding", but somehow "Trillions" seemed like a REAL book, with ideas and characters to relate to.
Farm life makes you receptive to the universal gateway of books. I can remember being so engaged in a book, that when I had to do a chore like feed the horses, I'd work as fast as I can, as if I was missing out on the book the way I would be if I had to interrupt a TV show.
That was the start. I have logged all my reading for the last 15 years or so, and I've now added most of those books here. That can tell you the rest of the story.
It was January 2021, and Rick Deckard had a license to kill.
Somewhere among the …
Reality and illusion mashed together (again)
4 stars
I've read a few of Dick's novels, and a common theme is a sort of nightmare of suburban reality and domestic life. From the top here you get protagonist Deckard's unhappy marriage, in a home where the "mood organ" is an essential appliance. It allows you to schedule whatever emotion or experience you feel you need to have, be it loving your job or enjoying television. Then there's the status symbol of having a pet. Animals are rare and expensive, but if you can only afford a robotic replica (an electric sheep) you won't impress the neighbours who might own a real one.
As he gets into his action man job, hunting illegal human replicants, Deckard stumbles into part of the city where everything is flipped. Biological humans are illegal, robotic detectives hunt them. But one key question is the same in both worlds: how can you know if you're …
I've read a few of Dick's novels, and a common theme is a sort of nightmare of suburban reality and domestic life. From the top here you get protagonist Deckard's unhappy marriage, in a home where the "mood organ" is an essential appliance. It allows you to schedule whatever emotion or experience you feel you need to have, be it loving your job or enjoying television. Then there's the status symbol of having a pet. Animals are rare and expensive, but if you can only afford a robotic replica (an electric sheep) you won't impress the neighbours who might own a real one.
As he gets into his action man job, hunting illegal human replicants, Deckard stumbles into part of the city where everything is flipped. Biological humans are illegal, robotic detectives hunt them. But one key question is the same in both worlds: how can you know if you're real or artificial?
I mention the domestic setting and the "mirror world" chapter because they are not included in the film. I can't help comparing it to the film, which I love. But none of the films I have seen of Dick's work fully capture his recurring themes of unreality, asking what is it like to be inside your own mind, when your own mind deceives you so much? Maybe you, the reader, can answer that question with comfort if you are talking about your own thoughts, but when you read a Dick book you are in HIS mind and he is - how shall I put this - crazy? It's not the right word. He was paranoid, in the sense of believing people were out to get him, suspicious of government in a sort on conspiracy theory way, and later in his life subject to a delusional obsession which seems to have resulted from a neurological condition, leading him to believe that he was in contact with some sort of higher power or cosmic consciousness.
In the end, Dick's world is just too much for me. I can't love his books, but I still read them. His ideas are - umm - FAR OUT, and I like that. But his mind is warped and ultimately that's what the books are about.
Engrossing post apocalyptic book that told entirely in a vividly degenerated post-English that the reader …
A masterpiece of post-apocalypse science fiction
5 stars
The invented future dialect is front and centre of this book. There are words and sentences you won't fully understand at first, but as you read you get better at understanding it in context. Then you are almost FEELING the language, making up for anything you miss with that added element in the text. Re-reading is rewarding and it will open up more details of the story.
Young Riddley Walker tells the tale of life in an England long after a nuclear holocaust which has largely destroyed civilisation. The remnants only have a sketchy understanding of what has gone before, mixed in with religion, history and mythology, as they terrifyingly rediscover a weapon of destruction, known as the 1 Big 1. Not yet MASS destruction, but you have a feeling of dread that the cycle is starting again.
It's comparable in themes to Walter M Miller's "A Canticle for Liebowitz", …
The invented future dialect is front and centre of this book. There are words and sentences you won't fully understand at first, but as you read you get better at understanding it in context. Then you are almost FEELING the language, making up for anything you miss with that added element in the text. Re-reading is rewarding and it will open up more details of the story.
Young Riddley Walker tells the tale of life in an England long after a nuclear holocaust which has largely destroyed civilisation. The remnants only have a sketchy understanding of what has gone before, mixed in with religion, history and mythology, as they terrifyingly rediscover a weapon of destruction, known as the 1 Big 1. Not yet MASS destruction, but you have a feeling of dread that the cycle is starting again.
It's comparable in themes to Walter M Miller's "A Canticle for Liebowitz", and in style to Anthony Burgess' "A Clockwork Orange". Iain M banks' "Feersum Endjinn" also does a great job at the invented dialect. But of all these, I think "Riddley Walker" is the one I'll never tire of re-reading.
Starting from the first ever singles chart and riding an epic journey through time, Bob Stanley gives an authoritative and affectionate account of pop music. I love it when he gets up to the 1980s and mentions his own band - just one in a comma-separated list of like-minded indie popsters who emerged at that time. If I was writing it, I might have given them an extra sentence or two. Maybe Bob was trying to avoid criticism of bias or self-promotion, but I loves me some Saint Etienne.
There are plenty of histories of Rock and Roll and popular song. This one fills a gap to tell the story of the genre of pop, often maligned, but I agree with Bob, it deserves to be taken seriously. Along with Jon Savage, Bob Stanley is one of the best music writers out there.
I love myth-making, I love the film "24 Hour Party People". There's that special wistful feeling when you think of the sad loss of an artist who died young. But this book gives a massive injection of reality to go alongside the fandom: Ian Curtis could also be a bit of a prick.
This book was the basis for the film "Control". The major players were consultants. There's no angry "how dare you tell such lies" from them. Ian's widow is telling a truth, her truth, the truth. All three. One of her most shocking claims is that he always voted conservative! She throws it out almost casually. After all, it is sort of incidental after everything else she outlines in their lives.
There's also a lot of love and wonder, and a reproduction of his lyrics at the end. He was a unique voice in rock music, but this …
I love myth-making, I love the film "24 Hour Party People". There's that special wistful feeling when you think of the sad loss of an artist who died young. But this book gives a massive injection of reality to go alongside the fandom: Ian Curtis could also be a bit of a prick.
This book was the basis for the film "Control". The major players were consultants. There's no angry "how dare you tell such lies" from them. Ian's widow is telling a truth, her truth, the truth. All three. One of her most shocking claims is that he always voted conservative! She throws it out almost casually. After all, it is sort of incidental after everything else she outlines in their lives.
There's also a lot of love and wonder, and a reproduction of his lyrics at the end. He was a unique voice in rock music, but this book goes deeper into the life behind the music.
A flood of commercialisation and west coast hippy mindlessness inundated America and the world, but floating among the flotsam and jetsam is the Fugs. They are irreverent, naughty, wildly creative, poetic, satirical, radical. They grew out of the Beat poet movement, but they seemed to skip over the whole early folk scene with Dylan and all that, and jump straight into an anarchic psychedelic collective musical project.
Here Ed Sanders tells the story and it is an absolutely thrilling ride, from the pre-Fugs days of his poetry journal "Fuck You - A Magazine of the Arts", through the cultural hub of the Peace Eye Bookstore (where visiting freaks could bed down for the night if they had nowhere else to stay), through to the Fugs' almost accidental acceptance by the music industry and the Folkways label. Ed witnessed menacing American nazis on the fringes of the march on Washington, when …
A flood of commercialisation and west coast hippy mindlessness inundated America and the world, but floating among the flotsam and jetsam is the Fugs. They are irreverent, naughty, wildly creative, poetic, satirical, radical. They grew out of the Beat poet movement, but they seemed to skip over the whole early folk scene with Dylan and all that, and jump straight into an anarchic psychedelic collective musical project.
Here Ed Sanders tells the story and it is an absolutely thrilling ride, from the pre-Fugs days of his poetry journal "Fuck You - A Magazine of the Arts", through the cultural hub of the Peace Eye Bookstore (where visiting freaks could bed down for the night if they had nowhere else to stay), through to the Fugs' almost accidental acceptance by the music industry and the Folkways label. Ed witnessed menacing American nazis on the fringes of the march on Washington, when MLK declared that he has a dream. The Fugs led the exorcism of the Pentagon at the height of the protest movement against the Vietnam War ("out, demons out!"), and they brought a raw, spontaneous lust to their music, be it poetic or puerile.
Throughout it all Ed Sanders rolls along with remarkable stability, a calm voice in the storm, following his muse of the moment - the ancient Greek poets or maybe the slum goddess from the lower east side. He and the late Tuli Kupferberg remain guiding lights.
A collection of creation myths from indigenous Australians
A lively, early collection of dreamtime myths
4 stars
I first read this book when I was ten years old. Saint Edward's School Canowindra didn't have a library, but the local council had a bookmobile - a van loaded with items from local libraries, which would visit weekly or fortnightly and let the children borrow a few books.
The title story left a great impression on me. It's a creation myth about the third dimension, and as such it involves concepts akin to geometry and physics, rather than the more typical geography and biology. There are plenty of them in here as well.
I was already pre-disposed to myths and fantasy. Around the same time I read a book of Arthurian legends, and another collection of ancient Greek and Roman myths. But these stories came from my own country, where I'd lived all my life, the only one I'd ever seen.
I have no indigenous ancestry. We lived on …
I first read this book when I was ten years old. Saint Edward's School Canowindra didn't have a library, but the local council had a bookmobile - a van loaded with items from local libraries, which would visit weekly or fortnightly and let the children borrow a few books.
The title story left a great impression on me. It's a creation myth about the third dimension, and as such it involves concepts akin to geometry and physics, rather than the more typical geography and biology. There are plenty of them in here as well.
I was already pre-disposed to myths and fantasy. Around the same time I read a book of Arthurian legends, and another collection of ancient Greek and Roman myths. But these stories came from my own country, where I'd lived all my life, the only one I'd ever seen.
I have no indigenous ancestry. We lived on stolen land, sovereignty was never ceded. Of course these stories would have so much more strength coming directly from, and being heard by First nations people. I presume Roland Eggleston is a white person. The brief biography says he lived for months among First nations people, and from his writing I feel that he has tried to be a neutral medium for other people's stories. It's a shame he didn't do what folklorists like the Brothers Grimm did, and give credit to the individuals who passed on the stories for him to put in a book.
But this is the book I found in 1973, and if I'd waited for something more authentic, I would probably have been left in even more ignorance. Later I would enjoy the picture books by Dick Roughsey, a brilliant first nations artist who helped educate us about the Rainbow Serpent and other deep dreamtime stories. My own children would be told the story of Tiddalik the frog, who drank all the lakes and rivers until the other animals made him laugh and quench the parched land. It's now a mainstay of early childhood education.
As I type Australia is debating whether to create a formal voice for indigenous people, and enshrine it in the constitution. These stories show that there is so much to say, and hearing from all those voices can enrich us all.
Karl and Wolfgang were like the George and Ringo of Kraftwerk. Ralf and Florian were definitely John and Paul. But Wolfgang surprised my by writing this funny, honest and critical account of his time as a worker in Kraftwerk's music factory. The leadership of the group were definitely weird and obsessive, but they produced brilliant, innovative, shimmering life-changing music. The more down-to-earth rock music fan Wolfgang lifts the lid on Kraftwerk while still maintaining their richly deserved status as musical legends, a status he shares.
Railsea is a young adult novel written and illustrated by English writer China Miéville, and …
Grand adventure in late late LATE capitalism
5 stars
Only China Mieville could create a weird future where the earth is covered by oceans not of water, but of railways. Later in the book you learn that capitalist railway barons have created this weird future as their monopolistic power overwhelms society. SF nerds of a particular bent might recall Douglas Adams and his planet which became dominated completely by the manufacturing of shoes.
But "Railsea" is not a humorous book like H2G2, it's a rollicking adventure. The unreal, impossible setting becomes compelling and believable. In fact it's the most fun I've had reading any of his books. He didn't quite nail YA in "Un Lun Dun", but he gets it right here.
Sometimes I look at the Apollo program as a collaborative conceptual art project. The props and the set and stage design were better than anything that came before. The accompanying audiovisual elements were superb. The casting was brilliant. The scriptwriters set out to tell a story of American superiority, but as the project progressed, the themes evolved into a wider story encompassing all humanity.
Making Armstrong leading man was a key part in that evolution. His first instinct was to recognise that he was a small part in a massive engineering project, and he always acknowledged the countless thousands of people who made his famous journey possible. He was also smart enough, wise enough, to recognise that he would inevitably be seen as some sort of emissary for humanity, a chosen one, a messiah figure.
For a lesser man, especially a military man, how easy to slip into that role …
Sometimes I look at the Apollo program as a collaborative conceptual art project. The props and the set and stage design were better than anything that came before. The accompanying audiovisual elements were superb. The casting was brilliant. The scriptwriters set out to tell a story of American superiority, but as the project progressed, the themes evolved into a wider story encompassing all humanity.
Making Armstrong leading man was a key part in that evolution. His first instinct was to recognise that he was a small part in a massive engineering project, and he always acknowledged the countless thousands of people who made his famous journey possible. He was also smart enough, wise enough, to recognise that he would inevitably be seen as some sort of emissary for humanity, a chosen one, a messiah figure.
For a lesser man, especially a military man, how easy to slip into that role and be an all-American cliche. Armstrong was never going to be anything other than himself. I enjoyed reading about his unorthodox religious beliefs (or lack thereof). He was guarded about it, but before he was a megastar he once openly described himself as a Deist, someone who doesn't believe in an interventionist god. His mother was a devout Christian, she could always be counted on to turn to the camera and declare that god would protect her son and bring him home safely. Even she expressed doubts later in her life, she was like a foxhole Christian. When confronted by death she didn't have the strength to maintain her delusions, she finally adopted some of her son's rational approach. (Actually I'm exaggerating this part of the book somewhat, but that was my personal reaction).
What I've written above is my take on this excellent biography. I emphasise certain elements of Armstrong's life which I relate to. A lesser book would leave those bits out for fear of provoking controversy. The religious right doesn't care about facts, truth, or ethics. They'd prefer to have some dishonest American mythology. Armstrong wouldn't let them, and Hansen is not playing their ridiculous game either.
It's laid out like a series of magazine articles, there are lots of photos. It's fun! But the writing is not dumbed down, it tells it like it is. Bubblegum music was right on the edge because every time it mentioned sugar, you know it was really about sex.
Also, if you are a late boomer or an early gen-Xer, you remember how smug your big brother or your uncle was about bloated wanky crap like Yes and Grand Funk Railroad. The summer of love had disappeared up its own arse like a cocaine suppository. "Whole Lotta Love" and "Sugar Sugar" both came out in 1969. I love Led Zep as much as the next rock n roll tragic, but somehow there is a perfection about the Archies/Ron Dante's smash hit, the national anthem of Bubblestan. Play it loud and get you revenge on your dopey, clueless older siblings, who …
It's laid out like a series of magazine articles, there are lots of photos. It's fun! But the writing is not dumbed down, it tells it like it is. Bubblegum music was right on the edge because every time it mentioned sugar, you know it was really about sex.
Also, if you are a late boomer or an early gen-Xer, you remember how smug your big brother or your uncle was about bloated wanky crap like Yes and Grand Funk Railroad. The summer of love had disappeared up its own arse like a cocaine suppository. "Whole Lotta Love" and "Sugar Sugar" both came out in 1969. I love Led Zep as much as the next rock n roll tragic, but somehow there is a perfection about the Archies/Ron Dante's smash hit, the national anthem of Bubblestan. Play it loud and get you revenge on your dopey, clueless older siblings, who will be driven insane. Even more insane than they already are.
I sent an email to Kim Cooper to tell her how much I like her writing and she sent me a lovely reply. I also sent one to Sandra Dedrick, the lead singer of The Free Design, who are the subject of a chapter in this book, she also wrote back to me. I feel absolute solid gold love for those people!